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- Date: Sun, 6 Jun 2004 17:23:50 -0400
- From: Josh Glover <tlug@example.com>
- Subject: Re: [tlug] Wine and installing of Internet Explorer
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Quoth jeraldweinstein@example.com (Sun 2004-06-06 12:50:28PM -0700): > Josh Glover <tlug@example.com> wrote: > > > +----------------------------------+ > > | | > > | Open Source | > > | | > > | +---------------+ | > > | | | | > > | | Free Software | | > > | | | | > > | +---------------+ | > > | | > > +----------------------------------+ > > I appreciate your drawing a diagram, they're much more fun to > read than text. Like I said in footnote [2]: "Bugger me if the sweet, siren call of ASCII art isn't nigh irresistable!". (Which, by the way, should *not* be taken as an invitation--I have already gotten several off-list replies ;) > >So, if you desire software that is "free as in beer", please refrain > >from considering yourself an Open Source advocate. Say it simply: > >"I prefer not to pay money for software". > > That's silly. I'm as much as an advocate for Linux as the next person > who enjoys this newsgroup. That may be. However, your statement: Quoth jeraldweinstein@example.com (Sun, 6 Jun 2004 10:16:47 -0700): > Suddenly, the open source (junkie) saw that something costs~!@#? > Argh!!! which is what triggered my rant, certainly does not paint you in that light. Here you are furthering the misconception that Open Source == Free (as in beer). > >I am not in any way making a value judgement here > > Sorry, but yes you are. > Pet peeves we all exercise from time to time. Re-read my post. If you still think I am insulting you in any way, you have missed my point *completely*. Google defines the phrase "value judgement"[1] as: "an assessment that reveals more about the values of the person making the assessment than about the reality of what is assessed" My values, as I expressed (rather civilly, I though) in my post, are that Open Source is: - something that makes me a more efficient coder - a way I see for me to do good, given my particular education and skillset (were I a brain surgeon, I would do some pro bono work) And my judgement was simply: In equating Open Source with "free as in beer", you are doing the Open Source a disservice (albeit a slight one). I provided what I consider a logical explanation of how I arrived at my conclusion. > >not wanting to pay > >for software is a completely valid point of view. > > If I need software, believe me I'll go through hell or highwater to > hunt it down. And I will pay for it. Again, not my point. I myself certainly place a much higher priority on paying for food, shelter, etc than I do software. If I were hungry and living from paycheque to paycheque, cost would certainly replace efficiency at the top of my criteria for choosing software. I do not consider Open Source a moral issue. What I do consider a moral issue is Software Engineering. In today's highly automated world, bugs in code *can* extract a high price, [2] even in human life! [3] We professional coders *and* our management *must* accept more responsibility for software quality, akin to physical engineers. [4] > >It just happens that > >so many people equate Open Source with "free as in beer" that it has > >become a significant problem, and a barrier to adoption in enterprise / > >corporate environments. > > It has been at once saddening and good that Open Source has become more > of an enterprise, I think. Part of the fun of Open Source for me has been that > it used to be totally free of corporate environments where the profit motive > deadened the creativity of software developers such as yourself. Agreed. However, the positive side of this is that some companies [5] really seem to be getting it, and paying coders to hack on Open Source (many in a relatively relaxed environment compared to the convention "wage slave" coder). Some of them are even giving back to the community! [6] > >However, from the point of view of an Open Source developer[9], I can > >say that the nicest contribution a user can make is an email saying > >something along the lines of, "Thanks for writing foo! I find it very > >useful for fooing my collection of bars!" He may or may not then go > >on to request a feature, report a bug, or attach a patch, but it is > >just the simple act of saying "thank you" that makes my day better. > > Thank you , Josh. I wish I could change professions and be an Open > Source Developer like you. I will give you the benefit of the doubt and assume that no sarcasm was meant: You are welcome. :) > But I can't. I get my fix of it by trying to actively stay involved > in threads that I need to gather information on here in the confines > of tlug! If you want to give back to the Open Source community, here are some ideas: - Monetary donations, as I expressed in my previous post. - Participating on this and other Open Source-related mailing lists. Remember to post your solutions at the end of a thread so that they show up in the archives! (Also, as Godwin noted, do fix your threading, that will make the archives *a lot* easier to glean information from.) - When you attempt something new on your Unix system, keep a Captain's Log [7] and then post it somewhere. I will be happy to post Captain's Logs on my site [7] as long as you follow my conventions and use a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License. [8] - Submit good bug reports [9] and / or feature requests for the Open Source tools that you use the most frequently. 15 minutes of your time can save untold hours of collective frustration for the countless other users of the software. - Document something. Anything! Submit it to the distribution [10] or author of the tool, or post it somewhere. [11] > Jerald Weinstein M.S. What is the Master of Science degree (hope I am not making a boneheaded assumption here) in? I ask to segue into my last idea: - Think of a software tool that would make work in your field of expertise easier. Suggest it to your local LUG or Open Source developer friend. Even if the people you suggest it to are too busy or just not interested, the idea is out there, and I cannot think of how many times I have said something like, "This guy Jerald Weinstein from the TLUG list had a pretty cool idea the other day..." to a fellow coder. Sometimes, said coder responds, "Holy shit! [12] That *is* a good idea. Hell, [13] it is a *great* idea! I bet I could hack something up..." and makes a break for his keyboard, mumbling to herself [14] the whole way. :) -Josh [1] http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&lr=&ie=UTF-8&q=define%3A+%22value+judgement%22&btnG=Search [2] http://sunnyday.mit.edu/accidents/Ariane5accidentreport.html [3] http://www.eweek.com/article2/0,1759,1544236,00.asp http://www.cs.tau.ac.il/~nachumd/horror.html [4] http://www.icivilengineer.com/General/Engineering_Ethics/ [5] http://www.redhat.com/ http://www.transmeta.com/ http://www.ibm.com/ http://www.incogen.com/ http://www.tfcci.com/ [6] http://www-136.ibm.com/developerworks/ [7] http://www.jmglov.net/unix/captains-logs/ [8] http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/1.0/ http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.0/ [9] http://www.chiark.greenend.org.uk/~sgtatham/bugs.html [10] http://www.gentoo.org/doc/en/doc-tipsntricks.xml [11] http://www.qnd-guides.net/ [12] Yes, all of my coder friends swear a lot. I have no fucking idea why. [13] This is my tip o' the hat to political correctness. Consider yourself fortunate. ;) -- Josh Glover Gentoo Developer (http://dev.gentoo.org/~jmglov/) Tokyo Linux Users Group Listmaster (http://www.tlug.jp/) GPG keyID 0xDE8A3103 (C3E4 FA9E 1E07 BBDB 6D8B 07AB 2BF1 67A1 DE8A 3103) gpg --keyserver pgp.mit.edu --recv-keys DE8A3103Attachment: pgp00013.pgp
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- Re: [tlug] Wine and installing of Internet Explorer
- From: jeraldweinstein
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